The Chicago Bears may finally be preparing to solve the biggest weakness on their entire defense — and honestly, the latest rumors surrounding veteran pass rusher Cam Jordan are starting to feel far more real than most fans expected. Because when one of the NFL’s most respected insiders, Albert Breer, was asked where Jordan could land in 2026, he answered with three words that instantly lit up Chicago fans:
“Give me the Bears.”
And honestly?
The deeper you analyze the situation, the more sense it actually makes.

The Bears finished the 2025 season with one of the weakest edge-rushing groups anywhere in the NFC. According to the breakdown, Chicago ranked near the bottom of the league in both pass-rush win rate and run-stop win rate. Outside of Montez Sweat — who remains the clear alpha of the defensive front — the Bears are relying heavily on unproven development and pure hope.
And honestly?
Hope is not a pass-rush strategy in the NFL.
Right now, Chicago’s outside pressure group is basically Sweat alongside players like Dayo Odeyingbo and Austin Booker, with the organization desperately hoping somebody takes a major leap forward. But according to the discussion, that uncertainty becomes extremely dangerous once playoff-level offenses enter the picture.
That’s why Cam Jordan suddenly feels so important.
Yes, he’s 36 years old.
Yes, many fans immediately hear that number and assume decline.
But according to the breakdown, Jordan still produced at a surprisingly high level in 2025 with the New Orleans Saints. He reportedly finished with 10.5 sacks, 36 pressures, and an elite run-defense grade while starting all 17 games.

And honestly?
That run-defense grade may be the most important detail of all.
Because dominant run defense at that age doesn’t come from athleticism alone anymore. It comes from experience, leverage, technique, film study, and understanding offensive tendencies before the snap even happens. According to the discussion, Jordan has essentially transformed 15 years of NFL experience into a tactical advantage younger players still haven’t learned yet.
That’s exactly why he fits what defensive coordinator Dennis Allen wants to build in Chicago.
And honestly?
That connection may be the biggest reason this rumor feels believable.
Allen and Jordan are not strangers connected by a quick phone call or offseason rumor. These two spent years together with the Saints organization, surviving playoff runs, rebuilds, locker-room pressure, and defensive battles side by side. Dennis Allen knows exactly how to use Cam Jordan, what motivates him, and where he still creates matchup problems at this stage of his career.
That familiarity matters enormously.
Because instead of spending months teaching a veteran free agent a completely new defensive system, Chicago would essentially be adding someone who already understands the language, structure, and responsibilities from Day 1.
And tactically?
Jordan would completely change how offenses prepare for Chicago’s defense.

According to the breakdown, Jordan still offers versatility that currently doesn’t exist elsewhere on the Bears roster. He can line up outside as a traditional edge rusher, then slide inside on passing downs and attack guards as an interior pressure player. Pairing Montez Sweat’s speed with Jordan’s power and technique would suddenly make Chicago’s front much harder to predict snap-to-snap.
Right now, the Bears defense reportedly feels too predictable.
With Jordan?
That changes immediately.
But there’s another piece to this story that may matter even more than sacks or pressures:
Leadership.
The Bears have one of the youngest defenses in football. There’s talent throughout the roster, but according to the discussion, much of the group is still learning how to function consistently at a professional playoff level. Cam Jordan brings something statistics can’t fully measure — experience, accountability, communication, and locker-room presence.
This is an eight-time Pro Bowler.
A Super Bowl champion.
A player who has survived January football, playoff pressure, and elite competition for over a decade.
That type of veteran influence can completely reshape the culture of a young defensive room.
Financially, the move also appears realistic.
According to the discussion, projections place Jordan’s market around a one-year contract worth roughly $6.8 million. The Bears currently sit around $11 million in available cap space, meaning the deal would fit financially if structured carefully with incentives and cap flexibility.
Now, to be fair, Dennis Allen himself reportedly said there have not been “many discussions” yet about signing Jordan.

But honestly?
That wording matters.
Because “not many” does not mean “none.”
And this early in the offseason, quiet exploratory conversations are completely normal around the NFL.
Meanwhile, another name is quietly emerging behind the scenes too:
Yaya Diaby of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
And honestly?
This possibility may be even more exciting long term.
Diaby is only 26 years old, has not missed a game in three straight seasons, and reportedly finished among the NFL leaders in pressure rate during 2025. According to the breakdown, his size, durability, leverage, and power-rushing style fit Dennis Allen’s defensive philosophy almost perfectly.
The problem is availability.
Right now, Tampa Bay reportedly still views Diaby as part of the future of its defense. But according to the discussion, if contract extension negotiations ever begin collapsing, the situation could change very quickly — and Chicago would need to move aggressively if that opportunity ever appears.
And honestly?
That’s why this entire conversation feels so important for the Bears.
Because everything else on the roster is starting to come together.
Caleb Williams now has another year inside Ben Johnson’s system.
Luther Burden III is expected to explode offensively.
The defense already led the NFL in takeaways.
But according to the discussion, the one missing piece keeping Chicago from becoming a true contender may still be outside pass rush consistency.
And honestly?
That’s why Ryan Poles faces a massive decision right now.
Does he pursue the veteran leadership and immediate production of Cam Jordan?
Does he gamble on the younger upside of Yaya Diaby?
Or does he somehow try to pursue both?
Because if the Bears fail to fix the edge-rushing problem again in 2026, this fanbase is going to remember this offseason for a very long time.